2021
DOI: 10.1007/978-981-16-5184-7_9
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Aeroelasticity

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Cited by 2 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…A wing stroke is characterized by many more kinematic quantities than the wing area and the wing-beat frequency, for instance the wing-amplitude angle, ratios of lengths and angles describing the shape of the wings, ratios of time intervals describing details of the wing motion. These quantities all have an effect on the wing beat frequency [ 23 , 27 , 36 , 37 ]. Angles and ratios of quantities of the same kind are all dimensionless, however.…”
Section: A Theoretically Derived Simple Expression For the Wing-beat ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…A wing stroke is characterized by many more kinematic quantities than the wing area and the wing-beat frequency, for instance the wing-amplitude angle, ratios of lengths and angles describing the shape of the wings, ratios of time intervals describing details of the wing motion. These quantities all have an effect on the wing beat frequency [ 23 , 27 , 36 , 37 ]. Angles and ratios of quantities of the same kind are all dimensionless, however.…”
Section: A Theoretically Derived Simple Expression For the Wing-beat ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This mean that other power-law functions discussed in Ref. [ 27 ], such as Norbergs f ∝ m 0.3 [ 14 ], Pennyquick’s f ∝ m 1/3 [ 12 ] or f ∝ m 3/8 [ 13 ], or the mass-flow theory arriving at f ∝ m [ 25 ], cannot be derived from purely physical arguments.…”
Section: A Theoretically Derived Simple Expression For the Wing-beat ...mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Due to the distribution of wing veins and thickness changes of folds, the deformation of insect wings during flapping is mainly torsion in the spanwise direction and curvature in the chord direction [22, 23] . The stiffness of the anisotropy wing in the spanwise direction is 1-2 orders of magnitude greater than that in the chord direction [24] . However, in some four-winged insects, the fore- and hindwings are coupled during flight, with the leading edge of the hindwing are ventrally locked with the retinaculum at the trailing edge of the forewing for moths [25] , or the costal margin of the hindwing base and overlaps with the trailing edge of the forewing base for butterflies [26] .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%